Kris stalled for as long as she could.
She enticed Nate into sex again when they woke upâthough it didnât take much enticingâand, unlike last night, their lovemaking was languid and sensual, filled with long kisses and soft caresses. By the time they got downstairs, Skylar had already left to meet her friends and Michael was mowing the lawn. Judging by the surprised look on Nateâs face when he saw his father tending to the front yard, Michael hadnât operated the lawnmower in quite a while.
Kris convinced Nate to let Michael handle itâthe elder Reynolds needed to prove to himself and to his children he could take care of things around the house on his ownâand to allow her to make pancakes for breakfast.
Jeez, she set the pan on fire once, when she tried cooking an omelet, and Nate acted like she would burn down the kitchen every time she stepped within two feet of the stove.
Luckily, no pans caught on fire this time around, and Kris brandished the slightly burnt pancakes with triumph.
âThe burns are your fault,â she said when Nate eyed the blackened flapjacks dubiously. âYou distracted me with your kisses.â
The dubious stare morphed into a slow, panty-melting smile. âIâd eat all the burnt pancakes in the world for one of your kisses.â To prove his point, he sawed off the darkest portion of his breakfast with a knife and popped it into his mouth.
He even made chewing look sexy.
âYou and your damn charm,â she grumbled while her heart pole-vaulted in her chest. âItâs not fair.â
That earned her another smile.
Nate could charm the panties off a nun with that grin of his, and he knew it.
Kris set aside extra pancakes for Michael, who came into the house right as she and Nate were finishing up.
âOh, Iâll just reheat them after I freshen up,â Michael said when Kris realized the food had gone cold. âNo big deal.â
âDid the lawnmower give you trouble?â Nateâs brow furrowed. âIt can get tricky, especially near the corner by the sidewalk.â
âYeah, I remember.â Michael bobbed his head. âAll good.â
âWhat about the section by the fence? Itâsââ
âNate, I got it,â his father said gently. âRelax. Enjoy your Saturday with Kris. Iâll take care of things around here.â
Nateâs frown deepened. âButââ
Kris caught his eye and gave a subtle shake of her head.
Nate pressed his lips together. âAll right.â
âWe should do something about the shed in the backyard, though. It needs a good clearing out. There are tools in there that donât even work anymore.â Michael paused, then added hopefully, âMaybe we could do it together. Have a father-son chore day one of these days.â A nervous chuckle. âI guess it doesnât sound too fun when I put it like that.â
Kris sipped her juice and stayed silent. Nate and his father were making progress toward rebuilding the trust between them, but it would take a while before things were back to the way they used to beâif that was even possible.
âSure,â Nate said. âThat soundsâ¦â He trailed off before repeating. âSure.â
Michael looked like heâd just won a record jackpot. âGreat.â He beamed. âWe can work out the details later.â
Kris couldnât suppress a smile at the elder Reynoldsâ joy. The man practically floated out of the roomâas much as a fifty-three-year-old could float, anyway.
âI canât believe I just agreed to a day of chores with my old man,â Nate said. âHigh school me wouldâve been appalled.â
âDonât lie. Youâre looking forward to it.â
He pointed a fork at her. âWhose side are you on?â
âYours, which is why I think you spending quality time with your dad is a good thing, even if said quality time involves physical labor.â Kris wrinkled her nose at the thought of all the dust and sweat.
Although a sweaty Nate wasnât necessarily a bad thingâ¦
âYeah, yeah,â Nate grumbled. He chewed and swallowed his last piece of pancake before he surveyed her with warm, sympathetic eyes. âSpeaking of dads, are you ready to see yours?â
A heavy block of dread dropped into the pit of her stomach. âNo, but Iâd rather get it over with.â Kris fiddled with her bracelet. âJust like ripping off a Band-Aid, right?â
âRight,â Nate confirmed. âAnd if you need me, Iâm a phone call away.â
She nodded.
She was not looking forward to her first conversation with her father post-bombshell, but it had to be done. She couldnât stall forever.
Forty minutes later, Kris found herself staring at her familyâs Beverly Hills home. Her fatherâand Gloriaâwere inside those walls.
The block of dread multiplied while she sat frozen in Nateâs car, tempted to call the whole thing off and hit the beach instead.
Avoidance: the answer to lifeâs problems.
Kris had avoided thinking about the implications of yesterdayâs revelations so far, and sheâd like that to continue, thank you very much. Sorting through her emotions regarding her real mother, her parentsâ twisted history, and her aunt/fake momâs out-of-the-blue betrayal required more time and therapy than she cared to commit to.
Sheâd grown up her entire life thinking her mom had abandoned herâ¦and she had, in a way. But sheâd been so hung up on the abandonment sheâd never given much thought to what would happen if her mother reappeared in her lifeâand sheâd certainly never thought about what she might do if she found out her real mother wasnât who she thought she was.
âCome inside with me.â Kris gripped Nateâs hand, letting his warm strength ease her nerves.
He didnât argue. He simply nodded and followed her to the front door.
Kris rang the doorbell, already regretting her breakfast decision. The pancakes and butter and maple syrup churned in her stomach, and she might hurl into that flowerpotâ
The door flew open. Risa, the housekeeper Roger had hired to keep the mansion in acceptable shape throughout the year, didnât remark on her bossâs daughterâs one-week absence from the household, but her relief was apparent.
She ushered them in and lured Nate to the kitchen with promises of homemade banana bread while Kris headed for her fatherâs office. It didnât matter the house or locationâyou could almost always find Roger in his office.
âCall me if you need anything.â Nate pressed a quick kiss to her lips before they parted ways.
God, she loved that man.
Having Nate nearby provided Kris with the strength she needed to put one foot in front of the other without upchucking into the nearest antique vase. By the time she arrived in front of her fatherâs study, the block of dread had shrunkâ¦by about two millimeters.
The door was ajar, but she knocked anyway and waited for her fatherâs âCome inâ before she entered.
Roger stood in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the back of the estate, a glass of pale brown liquid in hand. He wore a charcoal sweater and jeans, and tufts of dark hair stuck out like heâd woken up on the wrong side of the bed. Stress and exhaustion carved deep grooves in his face.
âKris.â His low voice rumbled over her, and for some inane reason, she wanted to cry.
âDaddy.â
They stared at each other, the air between them heavy with broken promises, unearthed truths, and remaining secrets.
They had a lot to talk about.
AFTER ONE HOUR, twenty-three minutes, and thirty-nine seconds of Nate doing nothing except staring, pacing, and hoovering Risaâs delicious banana bread, four things happened in rapid succession:
1) Nate ran out of bread to eat.
2) Gemma showed up looking for bread, Roger, and Kris (not necessarily in that order).
3) Kris and Roger showed up. The former nearly fell over when she saw Gemma, while the latter asked forâaka demandedâa âchatâ with Nate.
4) Nate received three back-to-back phone calls from Marty, which he ignored because he had enough drama in his life right now without arguing with his cousin/agent over whether to audition for some shitty straight-to-DVD movie that would probably do Nateâs career more harm than good.
âSorry, thereâs no more bread.â Nate stared woefully at the empty loaf pan on the kitchen island. âI ate it all.â
âJesus,â Roger said. âAll of it?â
âThatâs okay,â Gemma assured Nate. âI didnât really want the bread. I just wanted something to calm my nerves.â She darted a glance in Krisâs direction.
Kris crossed her arms over her chest. Red rimmed her eyes and tipped her nose, like sheâd been crying.
A wave of fierce protectiveness swept over Nate. He wanted to tug her into his arms and shield her from anything that might make her cryâher mom(s), her dad, Gloria, that ugly green sweater that made her recoil when she saw it at the outdoor flea market he took her and Skylar to the other day.
Since Kris was standing next to her father, who frowned at Nate like Nate had just announced heâd tested positive for STDs and was intent on spreading it to the older manâs daughter, he stayed where he was. That didnât stop his heart from aching. This whole situation was so fucked up.
Nateâs phone buzzed with another call.
Dammit, Marty.
Rogerâs frown deepened, and an irritated Nate silenced his phone. A second later, his screen lit up with a text message.
Marty: CALL ME! ITâS URGENT!!!
All caps, three exclamation marks. Nate wouldâve been concerned, except the last time heâd received a similar message from his cousin, Marty had needed a double date partner for the blonde twins heâd met at The Grove.
Needless to say, Nate didnât take Martyâs all-caps-three-exclamation-marks messages all that seriously.
âWhat are you doing here?â Kris asked Gemma. Her voice, while not unfriendly, oozed wariness.
Gemma fiddled with her bracelet, and Nate realized Kris had the same tic when she was nervous or distressed.
âI asked her to come.â Roger cleared his throat. âWe have a lot of unanswered questions from last night and I thought we should wrap those up after we had time to sleep onâ¦everything.â
âKris, do you mind if I speak with you? Alone?â Gemma asked softly.
Krisâs shoulders visibly tightened. Her eyes darted from her father to Gemma to Nate, who gave her what he hoped was a reassuring smile. Gemma seemed like a decent person, but if she hurt Kris, he was going to have it out with her.
He was sick to death of shitty parents.
âOkay.â Kris nodded in response to Gemmaâs question.
Relief spread across the other womanâs face. âOkay,â she repeated.
Nate forced himself not to follow as Kris and her biological mother disappeared into another part of the house, leaving him and Roger alone.
Shit.
Nate wished he hadnât eaten all the banana bread. A slice of that heavenly goodness wouldâve gone a long way toward easing the scowl on the Carrera patriarchâs faceâ¦or not. There was a strong possibility Rogerâs features had frozen into a perpetual disapproving grimace.
âI donât like you,â Roger said.
Damn. Talk about cutting to the chase.
âYes, you made that plenty clear when you tried to bribe me into breaking up with your daughter,â Nate said, equally blunt. No point in trying to kiss ass. It wouldnât get him anywhere, anyway.
âLet me finish,â Roger growled. âI donât like you, but Iâ¦appreciate how youâve looked after Kris these past few days.â He choked out each word like it was a shard of glass slicing his throat open on its way out. âI know about the cafe and her living at your house,â he added when he saw Nateâs surprise. âI put someone on her tail when I found her note saying she was moving out for the rest of the summer. Sheâs my daughter, and I wonât let anything happen to her. That being said, I still think you two arenât well-suited. Youâre too different, and thatâs not even taking into account your pastâ¦activities. But I can tell you genuinely care for her, and Kris cares for you, too.â More grimacing. âSo Iâm willing to step aside and allow you two to stay together for however long this thing between you lasts.â
Nateâs emotions fluctuated from shock to irritation to amusement in the two minutes it took Roger to give his little speech.
Trust Krisâs father to deliver the worldâs most tepid stamp of approval. You almost had to admire the guy.
âThank you,â Nate said. âBut with all due respect, there are a few things I want to clear up. One, Kris doesnât need anyone âlooking afterâ her. I supported her and cared for her because I love her, but she wouldâve done just fine on her own. Two, we may be from different worlds, but judging from what I heard yesterday, Iâm not the only one in this room whoâs learned firsthand that love doesnât give a ratâs assâexcuse my languageâabout where you live, or how much money you have, or whether you think someone is well-suited. Plus, itâd be boring as shitâagain, excuse my languageâto be with someone whoâs exactly like you. Finally, while I appreciate and am humbled by your quasi-approval of our relationship, please believe me when I say there isnât jack shit you could do, say, or offer me that would keep me away from Kris. Youâre not âallowingâ us to do anything. Itâs our decision whether we want to be together. Hers and mine. I will always stand by her side, so unless she tires of me one day, Iâm here to stay.â Nate shrugged. âIâd say sorry, but I promised myself I wouldnât lie anymore.â
A stunned silence filled the kitchen.
Nate was sure the other man would clock him in the face, but then Roger did something that shocked him even more than a sucker punch in the eyeâhe laughed. Loud and hard, like it was the first time heâd laughed in years.
âYouâve got balls, kid,â Roger said when his amusement died down. âWhich is good, because Carreras donât respect people without balls. But let me be clearâthis is a one-time occurrence. Speak to me like that again and Iâll have my guy fix that pretty face of yours.â
Roger sounded more like a mafia don than a respected businessman, but Nate supposed there wasnât a huge difference between corporate bosses and mob bosses in the dog-eat-dog world of capitalism.
He one hundred percent believed Roger had a âguyâ and that said guy ran all manners of unsavory errands for his employer.
âUnderstood.â
Nate wasnât a pushover, but he wasnât an idiot, either.
His phone lit up with yet another call from Marty. Heâd put it on silent, but the flashing screen was almost as annoying as Smash Mouthâs âAll Starââthe ringtone his cousin/agent had programmed for just his callsâplayed on repeat.
âAre you going to get that?â Roger raised his eyebrows. âYour phone has been going off nonstop since I stepped into the kitchen.â
Even though Nate didnât have the energy to deal with Marty, he took Rogerâs advice. It was best to get the call over with so he could go back to worrying about how Krisâs conversation with Gemma was going.
âThank God!â Marty yelled when Nate picked up. âWhere the hell have you been? Iâve been calling and calling and callingââ
âSorry.â Nate interrupted the other manâs litany of âcallings.â âI was busy.â
He shifted his weight from one foot to the other, hyperaware of Rogerâs presence a mere five feet away, though Krisâs father appeared engrossed in his own phone. He was frowning and tapping on that thing like it could predict stock prices for the next fifty years with one hundred percent accuracy.
âDoing what?â Marty demanded. âNever mind. Itâs not important. What is important is what Iâm about to tell you. Are you ready? Are you sitting down? Are youââ
Nate released a weary sigh. âJust tell me.â
âFine.â A dramatic pause, during which Nate could feel his patience stretching thin. âYouâre on the shortlist for the Scott West film!â
Nateâs eardrums rang from the volume of his agentâsâbecause Marty was acting as his agent right now, not his cousinâexcited yell. It was so loud it bled into the air surrounding Nate and caused Roger to look up.
âDid you hear me?â Marty sounded breathless. âYou are on the motherfuckinâ shortlist for a motherfuckinâ Scott West film. You and three other guys. All relative unknowns, because this is West weâre talking about. Iâve seen the other guysâ reelsâthey ainât that good. Youâre much better, and Iâm not just saying that because youâre my cousin. You have a real shot at getting this, and then itâs fucking A-list, no-more-auditions-needed, cover-of-Vanity Fair time, baby! Your callback is in one week, andâ¦â
While Marty rambled on, alternating between logistics and wild dreams of the future, Nate struggled to catch his breath. He felt like heâd paddled out to sea on a calm day, only to get swept up in an unexpected tidal wave.
Heâd auditioned for the Scott West film a few days ago, but he hadnât expected much. He definitely hadnât expected to be shortlisted this quicklyâor at all.
Holy fucking shit.
The import of the situation sank in. Nateâs chances of starring in a Scott West film had gone from one in a million to one in four. He had a twenty-five percent chance of getting everything heâd ever wanted. Career-wise, at least.
After a lifetime of looking up at the stars, he was finally close enough to almost touch them.
âAlmostâ wasnât the same as âcertainly,â but it was a helluva lot better than anything Nate had achieved so far.
He was vaguely aware that Roger had disappeared in the past ten minutes, but Nate didnât question where the other man went. He didnât do much except stand in dumbfounded silence, his heart racing, his palms sweating, and his mind whirling with a million thoughts and ideas and to-do items.
Kris.
Of all the people in the world, Nate wanted to share the news with her first, but she had enough going on right now.
Nate paced in a small circle while Marty doled out dubious advice with a few gems mixed in. ââ¦West himself will be there. Wear grayâitâs his favorite color. I donât know why, because gray is depressing as hell, but any bit helpsâ¦â
Heâd thought this summer would be like any other. Boy, had he been wrong.
First, heâd met Kris, and now this. His possible big break, which he learned about in the kitchen of the man whoâd tried to pay him $50,000 to break up with his daughter. The same daughter whoâd just found out her mother wasnât really her mother and that her real mother was her auntâlong presumed deadâwhoâd had an affair with her father.
A laugh broke out of Nateâs chest at the absurdity of it all.
Somehow, when he wasnât looking, his life had turned into a movie.